'As you wish, Citizen Secretary,' was all he said, and something like amusement glittered in those cold eyes as she gave his hand one last squeeze and released it.
'Thank you,' she said, and glanced around the office. A raised eyebrow was her only comment on its somewhat worn opulence, and she allowed herself a gracious air as she settled into the chair Theisman indicated. She leaned back and crossed her legs, and he took a facing chair rather than returning to the one behind his desk. It wouldn't do to do anything that could be construed as an effort to assert his own authority, after all.
'Would you care for some refreshment, Citizen Secretary? I hope you'll join Citizen Commissioner LePic, the senior members of my staff, and myself for supper shortly, but if you'd care for anything in the meantime... ?'
'No, thank you, Citizen Admiral. I appreciate the offer, but I'm fine.'
'As you wish,' he repeated, settling back in his own chair with a politely attentive expression, and more amusement flickered in her eyes. His expectant silence was its own form of defensive social judo. It was courteous enough, but keeping his mouth shut was also the best way of making certain he kept his foot out of it, and this was one conversation in which even a minor
'I suppose you're wondering exactly what I'm here for, Citizen Admiral,' she said at last, and he gave a small shrug.
'I assume that you'll tell me anything I need to know in order to meet your needs, Citizen Secretary,' he replied.
'Indeed I will,' she said. Then she cocked her head to one side. 'Tell me, Citizen Admiral. Were you surprised when I asked to meet you alone?'
Theisman considered pointing out that they were not, in fact, alone, but she clearly regarded her bodyguards as mobile pieces of furniture, not people. He also considered playing fat, dumb, and happy, but not very seriously. A man with no brains didn't make it to the rank of full admiral, even in the PRH, and trying to pretend otherwise, especially with this woman, would be not only stupid but dangerous.
'Actually,' he admitted, 'I
'I do,' she told him, 'and I will. But that will be largely as a member of the Committee, and I wanted to speak to
'As I'm sure you're aware, Citizen Admiral, we've been on the defensive virtually since this war began. Not that it's the fault of our heroic Navy and Marines, of course,' she said, and paused, smiling another of those thin smiles. But Theisman only waited, refusing to rise to the bait, if bait was what it was, and she went on after a few seconds.
'The corrupt, imperialistic ambitions and incompetence of the Legislaturalist oppressors combined to betray the Republic on both the domestic and the military fronts,' she said. 'Domestically, they systematically impoverished the People for their own greedy ends and to support the machinery of oppression needed to suppress resistance to their ruthless exploitation of the People. Militarily, their criminal overconfidence led them into the initial disasters on the frontier which squandered our original numerical superiority and allowed the enemy to throw our courageous fighting forces back in disarray. Would you agree with that analysis, Citizen Admiral?'
'I'm scarcely the best person to ask about domestic affairs, Ma'am,' Theisman replied after a moment. 'As you may know, I was raised in a creche, and I went straight into the Navy out of high school, so I never really worked in the civilian sector and I have no close family. In a sense, I suppose, you might say I've always been in the service of the state one way or another, without much of a personal experience basis from which to evaluate conditions in civilian society. And I haven't been back to Haven, except on Navy business, in fifteen T-years, which, I'm sorry to say, hasn't given me the opportunity to see how conditions have changed since the coup.'
'I see.' Ransom steepled her fingers under her chin and arched her eyebrows. Apparently she'd decided to be amused by Theisman's carefully phrased evasions, for which he was grateful, but she wasn't prepared to let him completely off the hook. 'I don't suppose I ever really realized how, um,
'I'd certainly hope so, Citizen Secretary!' Theisman responded vigorously in his relief at having gotten out of perjuring himself over his own opinion on the relative oppressiveness of the Legislaturalists and the Committee of Public Safety.
'Good! Then tell me how
'Well, Ma'am,' he said after the briefest of pauses, 'I'm not as gifted with words as you are, so I hope you'll forgive me if I speak bluntly?' He paused once more until she nodded, then went on. 'In that case, Citizen Secretary, and speaking bluntly, the military 'mess' we're in is so deep that picking a single cause, or even the most important
He paused again, lips pursed as if to consider what he'd said, then shrugged.
'I suppose what I'm trying to say, Citizen Secretary, is that our present military difficulties are the product of everything that preceded them, and that the disastrous way the war opened, plus the confusion engendered by the Harris Assassination, paved the way for everything else. So, yes, on that basis I'd have to agree that incompetence and stupidity on the part of the old officer corps and our political leadership are to blame.'
'I see,' Ransom repeated, and Theisman held his breath, for his final sentence had come much closer to candor than he'd intended. The old officer corps
Apparently, she didn't. She sat there, gazing at him while she considered what he'd said, then nodded and leaned slightly forward.
'I'm glad to see that you have a realistic grasp of how we got where we are, Citizen Admiral,' she said. 'It encourages me to believe that you also understand what we have to do to dig ourselves out of our current difficulties.'
'I can think of several things I'd like to see done from a military perspective,' Theisman said cautiously. 'Not all of them are possible, of course, particularly in light of our heavy losses to date. But I'm not really qualified to offer advice on economic or social policies, Ma'am, and I'm afraid I'd feel presumptuous if I made the effort.'
'It's good to meet someone who recognizes the limitations of his own experience,' Ransom replied so smoothly that her silken tone almost,